Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaDuring the Cold War, an American soldier is abducted in West Berlin, sparking a recovery effort led by Colonel Steve Van Dyke.During the Cold War, an American soldier is abducted in West Berlin, sparking a recovery effort led by Colonel Steve Van Dyke.During the Cold War, an American soldier is abducted in West Berlin, sparking a recovery effort led by Colonel Steve Van Dyke.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 1 candidatura in totale
- Frederick S. Hobart
- (as Casey Adams)
- World Series Game Radio Announcer
- (voce)
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Driver
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
The plot is very, very complex. Even if you pay full attention to every word and every character nuance, you'll probably still be unprepared for the twists and turns of Nunnally Johnson's subtle and complex story.
On this topic, you'll note some reviews criticising the plot for weaknesses. Not So. It is a foolhardy reviewer who goes up against a Nunnally Johnson script! To elaborate I'd have to spoil. Suffice it to say that this story is a wild horse - and you'll have one heck of a job staying on its back as it bucks, twists and cavorts.
Worth seeing - has to be seen, some might say - more than once!
Mind you this isn't any ordinary corporal. Turns out he's the son of Broderick Crawford who is doing a light version of his junk tycoon from Born Yesterday. As it is explained in a line which audiences today might not get, 'he plays golf'. That he was a businessman who played golf was meant that he played regularly with the most famous golfer in America. You could not go a week in the USA of the Fifties without reading in the newspapers or hearing on radio or television about President Eisenhower tearing it up at some golf course. No one born after 1956 or so would possibly grasp the meaning of that description.
So Crawford goes to Berlin to get some action and he runs into Gregory Peck of the Provost Marshal's office who does things in his own time and won't be bullied or influenced.
Peck's role calls for him to be soldier, diplomat, and psychologist all in one. But he's a professional and he carries it off despite a few unexpected wrinkles. One of them turns out to be Anita Bjork who has been working both sides of the Cold War in an effort to obtain her much needed absinthe.
Aiding and abetting Peck in his attempt to free the corporal are Rita Gam as his girl Friday, Sgt. Buddy Ebsen, Peck's non-com aide, and army doctor Walter Abel who has to be on standby at the climax of the film. Why is that, you have to watch Night People to find out, but Abel's needed for a potential emergency.
Berlin ever since the airlift was at the center of the Cold War with the Russians. The wall had not been built yet and after that things kind of settled to an uneasy acceptance until the fall of the Soviet Union. Night People is an average Cold War drama made better by the presence of some A list cast members and a tightly edited script by Nunnally Johnson who also directed.
Broderick Crawford is the father of the captured soldier, and he does an excellent job. Rita Gam is Ricky, Peck's beautiful and feisty secretary. There are several TV faces as well: Buddy Ebsen, Walter Abel, and Max Showalter. Anita Bjork is "Hoffy," a woman who works for Peck yet may be playing both ends.
But the film is really Peck's, who does a fantastic job creating an interesting, tough, passionate, decisive, and funny character. He's instantly both likable and admirable.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe fight between Gregory Peck and Broderick Crawford was filmed in one take.
- BlooperWhen Van Dyke hands Hoffy the poisoned drink, he is grasping the top of the glass. The scene cuts to a different view, and Van Dyke is grasping the bottom of the glass.
- Citazioni
Col. Steve Van Dyke: [alone together in a hospital room] Well?
Frederick S. Hobart: I want to know what you're up to Steve.
Col. Steve Van Dyke: Why?
Frederick S. Hobart: I don't care what you think of that government over there, you can't make any kind of a crooked deal with it.
Col. Steve Van Dyke: Who's dealin' with any government?
Frederick S. Hobart: Aren't you?
Col. Steve Van Dyke: Now look Freddy, we asked them over there about Corporal Leatherby, didn't we?
Frederick S. Hobart: Yes.
Col. Steve Van Dyke: So what did they say?
Frederick S. Hobart: That they'd never heard of him, of course.
Col. Steve Van Dyke: So alright, how could I be makin' a deal with a government that never heard of him?
Frederick S. Hobart: You know very well that that's only their way of doing things.
Col. Steve Van Dyke: Not in my book. If a big, friendly power like the Russians tells they never heard of Corporal Leatherby, that's good enough for me. Now will you run along n' let me get on with this job?
Frederick S. Hobart: Then whom are you dealing with?
Col. Steve Van Dyke: Now look Freddy, for Pete's sake, don't you think the Russians like a little private enterprise as well as anybody else? As far as I'm concerned, I'm dealin' with a small group of progressive businessmen over there - what I think you Americans call a mob. Now is there anything wrong with that?
[a knock at the door disrupts their conversation]
- Curiosità sui creditiFor the first time ever, the CinemaScope logo ("Twentieth Century-Fox presents A CinemaScope Production") is not shown until about five minutes into the film, after the opening sequence.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Gregory Peck: An Actor's Craft (2017)
- Colonne sonoreThe Stars and Stripes Forever
(uncredited)
Music by John Philip Sousa
Played during the military review at the beginning
I più visti
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 1.250.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 33 minuti
- Proporzioni
- 2.55 : 1